I find the comments on the Karajan Aida interesting, as I think I'm right in saying that Culshaw and his team deliberately went for a very wide dynamic range, and it was also the first time that they used closed circuit television to cue the offstage singers in the Nile Scene and elsewhere. I no longer have the original LPs with that hideous gatefold cover from Cecil B de Mille, but I don't remember the dynamics seeming too extreme, the use of perspectives is still very impressive. The CD dynamics seem wider than I remembered on the LP, but I have made big equipment upgrades in recent years which possibly accounts for that.
I listen in a room about 28 feet long by 13 wide, with the speakers on the narrow wall, and surround speakers about halfway back in the room, and if I have a complaint it is usually not about dynamics, but rather about over close microphone positioning, particularly on solo piano. This is something that BBC engineers often do better than some commercial rivals, when broadcasting from the Wigmore Hall, for example.
The ear is easily fooled into perceiving wide dynamics if there are clear perspectives and a good sense of depth, convincing in living room conditions. Unfortunately those virtues are exactly what many modern orchestral recordings seem to have lost, they batter our ears at the climaxes, but never sound real. It can be done, even today, when conditions are right. One stunning example is the opening scene in Simon Rattle's recording of Szymanowski's King Roger, you may need to warn the neighbours though!
I listen in a room about 28 feet long by 13 wide, with the speakers on the narrow wall, and surround speakers about halfway back in the room, and if I have a complaint it is usually not about dynamics, but rather about over close microphone positioning, particularly on solo piano. This is something that BBC engineers often do better than some commercial rivals, when broadcasting from the Wigmore Hall, for example.
The ear is easily fooled into perceiving wide dynamics if there are clear perspectives and a good sense of depth, convincing in living room conditions. Unfortunately those virtues are exactly what many modern orchestral recordings seem to have lost, they batter our ears at the climaxes, but never sound real. It can be done, even today, when conditions are right. One stunning example is the opening scene in Simon Rattle's recording of Szymanowski's King Roger, you may need to warn the neighbours though!
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